Community groups and Police Free Penn are hosting a panel discussion on the university s relationship with Black Philadelphians
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Connecting people through thoughtful giving - South Philly Review
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Column: Anti-Semitism Watch: A Hopeful Sign For Black Lives Matter
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Pam Africa described police abuse her family experienced at a protest outside the Penn Museum on April 28, 2021, over the museum’s mistreatment of the remains of children Tree and Delisha Africa who were killed when Philadelphia police dropped explosives on MOVE s headquarters in 1985. (Kimberly Paynter/WHYY)
More than 100 people rallied Wednesday evening in front of Penn Museum to call on the University of Pennsylvania to immediately return remains belonging to children who died in the 1985 MOVE bombing.
“They’ve been doing this to our Black bodies for hundreds of years, in the name of science, in the name of study,” said YahNé Ndgo, striking a chord with the crowd. “We are not subjects of study, we are human beings!”